From a Dream to a Dream (Hand2mouth)
So a Polish theater company walks into Artists Rep...
August 20th, 2008
Project X: You Are Here | Hand2Mouth Theatre gets into data analysis.0 comments
August 13th, 2008
Mimesophobia | A little murder (and Web surfing) before he goes.0 comments
July 30th, 2008
Songs (and Strings) of Summer | Recent releases from five local classical and postclassical performers.0 comments
July 23rd, 2008
A Chorus Line (Broadway Across America Portland) | Dancers dish about life on the Line.0 comments
July 16th, 2008
21A (Arts Equity) | There isn’t much to this magic bus.4 comments
July 16th, 2008
Imani Winds and Roberto Sierra | Classical music without the powdered wigs.0 comments
July 9th, 2008
Northwest Professional Dance Project | On the road to success, eight dancers pull over in Portland.0 comments
July 2nd, 2008
WEB Exclusive • Information Station | Tahni Holt's brainchild Information Studio was a remote-controlled icebreaker.1 comment
July 2nd, 2008
Les Misérables (Broadway Rose) | Can you hear the people sing—in Tigard?4 comments
June 18th, 2008
Agnieszka Laska-Dickson String Quartet | A remarkable family band tackles some serious strings.4 comments
![]() DROP-DEAD LEGS: Erin Leddy says hello to Daddy. IMAGE: Drew Foster |
[June 4th, 2008]
You couldn’t fault Bruno Schulz for lacking imagination. The Polish artist and writer, who only produced two collections of short stories before he was shot by a Gestapo officer in 1942, inhabited an effervescent world of magical geography and constant transformation. Like a whimsical Kafka, his was a wondrous, soft-focus reality of leggy brunettes and bug-men.
As with other surrealist authors, theatricalizing Schulz’s art is no simple matter. A number of attempts have been made—two films and a 1992 play, The Street of Crocodiles, by London’s Theatre de Complicite—all of which have resorted to abstraction to capture the writer’s imagination. A new collaboration by Hand2Mouth Theatre and Polish company Teatr Stacja Szamocin continues in the same vein.
Conceived and directed by Luba Zarembinska, an early mentor to Hand2Mouth director Jonathan Walters, From a Dream to a Dream is, as you might expect from the title, more of an impression than a direct translation of Schulz’s stories. There’s a recurring plot about a young man looking for his father in a creepy sanatorium, but it’s just a clothes-hanger for a series of weird and beautiful transformations: a tailor’s measurement-taking becomes a sexual act; a parade of lovely women in vintage lingerie becomes a funeral procession; a childish dance becomes bedlam. These moments, which showcase the ability of both companies to craft evocative scenes out of nothing at all, are rewarding enough to forgive a narrative frame that feels stilted and under-rehearsed.
There’s a wildness about the project that applies to space and time as much as the sights on stage. The ominous Conductor (Karol Bykowski) calls it “the penetration from behind of time’s mechanism, the hazardous fingering of its secrets.” I suppose that’s a poetic way of saying the show doesn’t make any damn sense, and doesn’t need to. The mesmerizing flow of polyvinyl dresses, mannequin legs, Jeb Pearson’s frightening leer and Ida Bocian’s barely restrained carnality is more than enough.
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